Twitter creates 'lite' version for
data-starved users
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[April 06, 2017]
By David Ingram
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Twitter Inc
<TWTR.N> is launching a faster version of its mobile service on
Wednesday aimed at people with sporadic connections or little data on
their smartphone plans, hoping to pick up users in harder-to-reach
emerging markets.
The company calls the version Twitter Lite and it will be aimed largely
at users outside the United States. Twitter Lite works through a web
browser, not a stand-alone phone application, but its appearance and
functionality are nearly identical to what app users experience,
according to a preview shown to Reuters.
The launch comes on the heels of similar products from other U.S. tech
firms. Facebook Inc <FB.O> released Facebook Lite in 2015 and on
Tuesday, Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O> YouTube unveiled a low-data mobile app
designed for India.
San Francisco-based Twitter lags behind those companies in building a
user base. It had 319 million average monthly active users at the end of
last year, up 4 percent year-over-year but still a fraction of
Facebook's 1.9 billion users.
A primary reason in some parts of the world is how much data its app and
earlier website consumed, Keith Coleman, Twitter's vice president of
product, said in an interview.
"We didn't feel like we were reaching these other countries well enough,
and this will allow us to do it faster, cheaper and with a better
experience than we've had before," he said.
The company estimates that, with several changes it is making to its
mobile website, mobile.twitter.com, users will see their average data
consumption on the browser version go down 40 percent.
With an additional data-saving feature users can turn on, data
consumption will drop some 70 percent on average, said Patrick
Traughber, a Twitter product manager. The reduction will come from
differences such as initially displaying previews of pictures instead of
full pictures.
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People holding mobile phones are silhouetted against a backdrop
projected with the Twitter logo in this illustration picture taken
September 27, 2013. REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/Illustration/File Photo
Like YouTube, Twitter is eyeing India's 1.3 billion people, and it
timed the release of Twitter Lite in part to coincide with the start
this week of a major cricket event there, the Indian Premier
League's Twenty20 tournament.
Cricket is the most popular sport in India and following sports in
real time is one of the main ways people use Twitter, which unlike
many other social media networks still has a chronological timeline
to emphasize immediacy.
Other countries where the company said it expects Twitter Lite to be
most useful include Indonesia, the Philippines, Brazil, Argentina
and Mexico.
(Reporting by David Ingram; Editing by Bill Trott)
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